We understand that a trip to the DMZ may not be included in
the agenda of your upcoming trip to South Korea. We would respectfully argue
that a presidential DMZ visit and address would be critical to efforts to bring
peace, security and freedom to the Korean people and other nations in Northeast
Asia as well as the security of the United States.Against the backdrop of unprecedented
nuclear missile-rattling, all eyes would be focused on our president as he
stands at the DMZ straddling North and South Korea. Would you continue to
verbally joust with the ‘rocket man’ or come armed with a bag of carrots?

Mr.
President: Whatever body language you use; we urge you to use this opportunity for
a long-neglected global teaching moment.

First, the world has long forgotten the Korean War, and the
more than 60,000 US servicemen and women who were killed or went missing in
action, the 100,000 wounded, and the more than 7,000 captured. Their gallant
sacrifice, and that of our allies, preserved the Republic of Korea (South
Korea) and became the cornerstone of the Miracle on the River Han. After going
through a few decades of rapid economic development, South Korea has become the
world’s 12th largest economy. Free, democratic, prosperous South
Korea, a fully responsible and engaged member of the international community,
has become a role model for others in Northeast Asia and beyond.

In stark contrast with the South, North Korea has remained a
human rights toxic wasteland. Run by three generations of an evil family cult,
North Korea today is a post-communist, post-industrial, dynastic kleptocracy.
The fundamental strategic objective of the Kim Jong-un regime, just like the
Kim Il-sung and the Kim Jong-il regimes before, is its own survival. Adamantly
refusing to open up to the world and to undertake reforms that would benefit
its citizens, the Kim regime believes that nukes, ballistic missiles and
keeping its elites wealthy—content but afraid—will guarantee its survival.

In order to produce its tools of death and fuel its giftpolitik, Kim Jong-un needs hard
currency and resources. The regime extracts these critical resources by
severely exploiting its people at home and abroad, and through exercising
merciless coercion, control, surveillance and punishment of its entire
population.

Mr. President, we hope that you would use the DMZ platform
to signal most of North Korea’s 25 million people, victimized by Kim Jong-un’s fearpolitik, that they are not forgotten. Today, 120,000 North Korean men,
women, and children are held at five political prison camps in North Korea.
Three generations of the same family are punished for the alleged wrongdoing of
a suspected political offender—all snatched from their homes in the middle of
the night, victims of enforced disappearances. Many other perceived political
offenders undergo a semblance of judicial process and receive prison sentences
at reeducation through labor forced labor camps, where they are mixed with the common
prison population. All prisoners are
subjected to a vicious cycle of forced labor and induced malnutrition, while
many of them are tortured or executed, publicly or secretly.

In February 2014, a UN Commission of Inquiry found that many
of the egregious human rights violations perpetrated in North Korea pursuant to
policies established at the highest levels of the state amount to crimes
against humanity.

But North Korea’s nuclear
and missile threats have all but buried these grave abusive human rights practices.

Mr. President, you could use your DMZ speech to expose the
undeniable nexus between North Korea’s human rights violations and the security
threats the Kim Jong-un regime poses to its Asian neighbors and the world. This
is a regime which fuels its weapons programs through ruthless exploitation of
its people and denial of basic human rights.

Today, the DMZ separates not only South from North Korea, but freedom
from tyranny and prosperity from abject poverty. The DMZ may not be the Berlin
Wall—it’s probably much worse. Mr. President, as you prepare for your upcoming
visit, you are correctly warning Kim Jong-un to stand down. But the most
important words you could utter as you look across the border are those you
could address to the people of North
Korea. Tell them they are not forgotten and will not be forsaken; that this
president will ensure that the fate of everyday North Koreans, especially those
trapped in the unyielding gulag systems, remains at the forefront of our
prayers and actions.

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The views and opinions expressed here are those of the authors' and not those of any other person, organization, or entity; they are the authors' alone. Specifically, they do not represent the views of the Board of Directors of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK) nor necessarily reflect the official policy or position of HRNK.